Preserved skin structure of a recently found fifteenth‐century mummy in Daejeon, Korea

Recently published reports on Korea's medieval mummies have been regarded as an invaluable source for studies into the physical characteristics of medieval Koreans. However, even though the mummified tissues have been investigated histologically on various previous occasions, there are many una...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of anatomy 2006-11, Vol.209 (5), p.671-680
Hauptverfasser: Chang, Byung Soo, Uhm, Chang Sub, Park, Chang Hyun, Kim, Han Kyeom, Lee, Gui Young, Cho, Han Hee, Kim, Myeung Ju, Chung, Yoon Hee, Song, Kang Won, Lim, Do Sun, Shin, Dong Hoon
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container_end_page 680
container_issue 5
container_start_page 671
container_title Journal of anatomy
container_volume 209
creator Chang, Byung Soo
Uhm, Chang Sub
Park, Chang Hyun
Kim, Han Kyeom
Lee, Gui Young
Cho, Han Hee
Kim, Myeung Ju
Chung, Yoon Hee
Song, Kang Won
Lim, Do Sun
Shin, Dong Hoon
description Recently published reports on Korea's medieval mummies have been regarded as an invaluable source for studies into the physical characteristics of medieval Koreans. However, even though the mummified tissues have been investigated histologically on various previous occasions, there are many unanswered questions relating to their tissue preservation. The aim of this study was to obtain new data on the ultramicroscopic characteristics of the mummified skin of a fifteenth‐century mummy found recently in Daejeon – one of the oldest ever found in Korea. Electron microscopy revealed that much of the epidermis had decayed; what remained of the dermis was filled with collagen fibres and melanin granules or invading bacterial spores present within the mummified epidermis. Considering the histological characteristics shared by naturally formed mummies in different parts of the world, we concluded that the ultramicroscopic patterns of the Daejeon mummy were more comparable with those naturally formed mummies than with artificially formed ones. This is the first full description of the morphological characteristics of the skin collected from this recently found medieval mummy from Daejeon, South Korea.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2006.00607.x
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subjects Burial
Collagen - analysis
Daejeon
Dermis - ultrastructure
electron microscope
Epidermis - chemistry
Epidermis - ultrastructure
Humans
Korea
Male
medieval
Melanins - analysis
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Microscopy, Electron, Transmission
Mummies - pathology
mummy
Original
Skin - chemistry
Skin - ultrastructure
Spectrometry, X-Ray Emission
title Preserved skin structure of a recently found fifteenth‐century mummy in Daejeon, Korea
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